The Chicago Cubs' third-round draft pick threw a complete game and extended his shutout streak to 26 innings in Oklahoma State's 1-0 victory over UC Santa Barbara in the College World Series on Saturday.

Hatch scuffled early before settling in to record the first shutout by the Cowboys (42-20) at the CWS since 1986, a game current pitching coach Rob Walton started.

"Not the easiest game in the world to pitch, because the first game of the World Series has a little vibe and buzz about it to kick things off," OSU coach Josh Holliday said. "He handled himself exceptionally well, and it's a great way for us to start the tournament."

Garrett Benge singled in the only run in the fourth inning, and from there Hatch took over.

"I definitely think there was some adrenaline there," Hatch said. "There weren't many nerves. I was in a good place mentally. I was missing high (early), and when I tried to get the ball down I was spiking some fastballs, which is unusual. I was able to make adjustments, calm down and make the pitches I needed to."

Hatch (9-2) allowed five hits, walked one and struck out seven in his dazzling 112-pitch performance for the Cowboys, who are in the CWS for the first time since 1999. It was his fourth shutout of the season.

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Hatch required 39 pitches through two innings and got some help from his defense after the Gauchos (42-19-1) threatened in the second and third. JJ Muno doubled into left center with one out for the first extra-base hit off Hatch in 16 innings, and Demspey Grover followed with a single. Hatch got Kyle Plantier to line out to shortstop Donnie Walton and struck out Josh Adams. The next inning, third baseman Benge started an inning-ending double play.

"I didn't have my stuff, and they were putting the ball in play pretty hard the first four innings," Hatch said. "Donnie made a hell of a play, and Benge, too. I'm not going to take any credit."

Santa Barbara starter Shane Bieber (12-4) was just was just about as good as Hatch, limiting the Cowboys to six base hits.

Three of them came in succession in the fourth inning, though, and produced Oklahoma State's only run. Corey Hassel singled to left, Walton to right and Benge through the middle to make it 1-0. Bieber escaped further damage when Conor Costello lined into a double play and Dustin Williams flew out.

"I lost my sharpness, compounded multiple mistakes in a row and they took advantage of it, hit the ball hard and that was the game," said Bieber, a fourth-round pick of the Cleveland Indians.

The Gauchos rolled into their first CWS appearance off five straight NCAA Tournament wins, including the super-regional winner at No. 2 national seed Louisville on freshman Sam Cohen's pinch walk-off grand slam last Sunday.

"We're still playing, we're still here, we're not knocked out yet," Gauchos coach Andrew Checketts said. "We'll go from here. We can't go back and change anything about this game."

Arizona 5, Miami 1

Nathan Bannister matched his career high with 11 strikeouts in seven innings and Arizona capitalized on Miami starter Michael Mediavilla's rocky first inning a victory in the College World Series.

Mediavilla hit two of Arizona's first five batters and issued a bases-loaded walk before Jared Oliva's two-run single made it 3-0. Zach Gibbons' two-run double in the fifth increased the lead to 5-1.

Bannister, who made his 13th straight start of at least six innings, confounded Miami batters mixing in his curveball with an upper 80s fastball.

Miami, which has come from behind to win 23 games, couldn't sustain its offense against the Seattle Mariners' 28th-round draft pick. The Hurricanes had runners in scoring position in the second, third, fourth, fifth and seventh innings against Bannister and again in the eighth against Cameron Ming but could push across just one run.

Bannister (12-2) struck out Edgar Michelangeli all three times he faced him. Michelangeli was the hero of Miami's super-regional clinching win over Boston College for hitting a three-run homer and grand slam. Zach Collins, the No. 10 overall draft pick, struck out twice and was doubled off in the fifth when second baseman Cody Ramer caught a line drive and beat him back to the bag.

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